Drum Corner
Welcome to jazzleadsheets.com's Drum Corner, designed for drummers, by drummers! Get drum transcriptions by famous jazz drummers (scroll down) or try great Minus You audio tracks where you can be the drummer. Parts are notated especially for drums. Useful tips and information specifically tailored to drummers can be found in the Drum Corner tab of a given song page (below the sound clip). If you spend a few months practicing with our audio tracks, you'll be a better drummer!
To see drum transcriptions listed by composer, go to SONGS, then click the SOLOS drop down and choose Drum. And check out our YouTube channel for drummer videos. See/download the Drum Notation Guide here.
DRUM
TRANSCRIPTIONS
Our drum transcriptions include: • layout for the whole recorded track • melody notated above the drum transcription for all melody sections • stickings • drum solos • trading fours & eights • song form indications throughout • stem up notation for reading ease.
MINUS YOU (Minus Drums)
With our Minus You audio tracks, there's no other drummer to fight with. It's just you and a great rhythm section, accompanying the melody and soloists. Some tracks also have exchanges and drum solo space: we've added finger snaps during those sections so the drummer can be aware of where the pulse lies.
- Bebop Irishman - Ray Bryant Swing (medium up)
- Philadelphia Bound - Ray Bryant Swing (uptempo)
- Sox-Trot - Jo Jones Swing (medium)
- Show Time - Jo Jones Swing (uptempo)
- Flashback - Art Farmer Swing (medium)
- Shape Up - Jon Gordon Even 8ths
- Shape Up - Jon Gordon Even 8ths
- Dubai - Billy Drummond 7/4 swing (medium groove)
- Peck A Sec - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Benji's Bounce - Dexter Gordon Swing (uptempo)
- Break Through - Hank Mobley Swing (medium up)
- Straight Ahead - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Third Time Around - Hank Mobley Swing (medium up)
- Third Time Around - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Satellite - Gigi Gryce Swing (medium up)
- Social Call - Gigi Gryce Swing (medium)
- Big Red - Tommy Turrentine Swing (medium)
- Flashback - Art Farmer Swing (medium)
- Eternal Triangle - Sonny Stitt Swing (uptempo)
- Three For The Festival - Rahsaan Roland Kirk Swing (medium up)
- Sevens - Roland Alexander Swing (medium up)
- Bet - Doug Watkins Swing (medium up)
- Mister Man - Eli "Lucky" Thompson Swing (medium up)
- Dancing Sunbeam - Eli "Lucky" Thompson Swing (medium)
- Flashback - Art Farmer Swing (medium)
- No Room For Squares - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Too Good For Words - Jon Davis Swing (medium up)
- One Up Front - Jon Davis Swing (medium)
- Here's Jonny - Jon Davis Swing (medium up)
- Waltz For J.D. - Jon Davis 3/4 swing (medium up)
- Just Because Of You - Jon Davis Latin
- Skeeter Blues - Lewis Nash Swing (medium up)
- Blue Spring Shuffle - Kenny Dorham Swing (medium)
- Got To Take Another Chance - Philly Joe Jones Swing (medium up)
- No Room For Squares - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Out Of Joe's Bag - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Workout - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Old World, New Imports - Hank Mobley Swing (uptempo)
- Satellite - Gigi Gryce Swing (medium up)
- Social Call - Gigi Gryce Swing (medium)
- Merry-Go-Round - Jonny King Swing (medium up)
- Seventh Avenue - Victor Lewis 7/4 even 8ths (medium up)
- Seventh Avenue - Victor Lewis 7/4 even 8ths (medium up)
- Back Road - Kenny Dorham Swing (medium)
- Pedro's Time - Kenny Dorham Latin/swing (medium)
- Night Watch - Kenny Dorham Swing (medium)
- Blue Spring Shuffle - Kenny Dorham Swing (medium)
- Monaco - Kenny Dorham Latin/swing
- Lotus Blossom - Kenny Dorham Swing (medium up)
- Windmill - Kenny Dorham Swing (medium up)
- Smoke Signal - John Webber Swing (medium)
- Philly Twist - Kenny Dorham Swing (medium up)
- Daahoud - Clifford Brown Swing (medium up)
"Papa" Joe Jones
Born Jonathan David Samuel Jones in Chicago, Illinois, Jo Jones got his start playing drums and tap-dancing in carnival shows in Alabama until joining Walter Page's band in Oklahoma City in the late 1920s. He, along with Walter Page and Freddie Green, joined Count Basie's band in 1934. That rhythm section would forever change the sound and feeling of jazz.
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Art Farmer
Art Farmer has long been admired for his lyrical playing. He started on trumpet, then switched to flugelhorn, helping to popularize the instrument. Eventually , Art played the Flumpet, a Flugelhorn-Trumpet combination that was especially designed for him. He played professionally since the 1940s, and started recording in bands at 19 years of age in 1948, when he played in the bands of Jay McShann, Benny Carter, Gerald Wilson and others.
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Ben Monder
Ben Monder is truly one of the most innovative and inimitable guitarists on the scene today. Able to summon a multitude of soundscapes from his guitar, a result of his nearly mythical work-ethic and connection to the instrument, Monder’s expansive palette has found him in demand from artists as wide ranging as Paul Motian, Brother Jack McDuff, and David Bowie.
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Bill Stewart
Bill Stewart is a versatile drummer and composer who has been active since the late 1980s. He attended William Patterson College (where he studied with Rufus Reid, Harold Mabern, and Joe Lovano) from 1986-1988 and made his recording debut while he was still a student. In 1990, he made his name working with guitarist John Scofield in an association that lasted for five years. Bill's 1995 highly-acclaimed release "Snide Remarks" on Blue Note featured Lovano, Eddie Henderson, Bill Carrothers, and Larry Grenadier; it included nine of Bill's own compositions as well. Since then, Bill has formed the Bill Stewart trio with Kevin Hays and Larry Goldings. Recent projects include work with Renee Rosnes, Jim Rotondi and Jon Gordon.
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Billy Drummond
Drummer Billy Drummond first came to international prominence when he joined the bands of the legendary Horace Silver and, later, J.J. Johnson and Sonny Rollins, with whom he spent three formative years. Now one of the busiest players of his generation, he can be heard on nearly 300 albums, including three critically acclaimed recordings as a leader. His album "Dubai" was named Best Jazz CD of 1995 by the New York Times. He currently leads his own band, Freedom of Ideas.
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Billy Higgins
Born in Los Angeles, Billy Higgins played professionally in R&B bands such as those of Bo Diddley and Jimmy Witherspoon. In 1953 he joined high school friend Don Cherry's group "The Jazz Messiahs." Higgins and Cherry met Ornette Coleman and joined his rehearsal band. The band played for years before debuting their music in 1958. It was with Ornette Coleman that Higgins first came to New York, where he became one of the most sought after contemporary jazz drummers.
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Bobby Porcelli
New York native Bobby Porcelli is one of Latin and Afro-Cuban jazz's most accomplished flautists and alto saxophonists. An exciting soloist influenced heavily by Charlie Parker and Sonny Still, Porcelli's alto has soared gracefully above the legendary percussive ensembles of Machito (1965-1966), Mongo Santmaria ('87-'90), and Tito Puente ('66-'00).
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Brian Lynch
Grammy Award-winner Brian Lynch is one of the most influential and well-respected trumpeters in both Latin and straight-ahead jazz. Brian grew up in Milwaukee and apprenticed with Midwest-based keyboardists Buddy Montgomery and Melvin Rhyne; he went on to earn his degree from the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music. After moving to New York in 1981, he earned his stripes working with jazz giants such as Art Blakey, Horace Silver, Barbarito Torres, and Phil Woods. Lynch recorded many records as a leader—23 since he began recording in 1986.
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Carl Allen
A leader in jazz drumming, drummer Carl Allen has been a force in the New York scene since the 1980s. Carl became interested in jazz after hearing an LP of Benny Carter as a teen. In his hometown of Milwaukee, Carl worked with Sonny Stitt and James Moody early in his career. He moved to the east coast to study at William Patterson College; a year before his graduation, Carl worked with Freddie Hubbard, for whom he served as music director for the next eight years. Over the course of his career, Carl has recorded on over 200 sessions as a sideman including dates with Donald Byrd, Art Farmer and Jackie McLean. He has performed with a who's who of jazz legends, including J.J. Johnson, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Benny Golson, Joe Henderson, and many others.
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Charli Persip
Drummer Persip grew up with jazz legends tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley and pianist Walter Bishop, Jr. in New Jersey. He got his start professionally playing with Tadd Dameron around the New York/New Jersey area in 1953, but became widely known for his work with the Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra and Quintet (1953-1958).
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Daryl Johns
Daryl Johns was born in the Bronx and began playing bass at age seven with encouragement from his father, drummer Steve Johns, and his mother, saxophonist Debbie Keefe. Johns has studied with Chip Jackson and Dave Santoro. He has attended the Jazz in July program, the Vermont Jazz Center, and the Litchfield Jazz Camp. Johns sits in regularly around the New York area with musicians including Joe Lovano, Dave Liebman, and Randy Brecker. He also performs throughout New York and New Jersey with a trio of his peers. Johns was featured on a Fox television segment called “12-Year-Old Jazz Prodigy."
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Geoffrey Keezer
A lauded name on the jazz scene since the tender age of 17, Geoffrey Keezer is one of the best-loved pianists today. A native of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, Geoff took up the piano at age three and quickly showed himself to be a prodigy. As an eighteen-year-old freshman at Berklee College of Music in 1989, he was invited to join Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, launching his talents into the spotlight. The year before, his mentor James Williams encouraged him to record his debut album, the well-received "Waiting In The Wings." His career continued to take off in the early 1990s with a performance at the Hollywood Bowl of Gershwin's Rhapsody In Blue (conducted by John Mauceri).
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Hank Mobley
In 1953, Hank Mobley started his jazz recording career with dates for Dizzy Gillespie and Max Roach. He continued playing and recording with Dizzy Gillespie through most of 1954. November 13, 1954, marked the first recording session of a new co-operative quintet called "The Jazz Messengers." The founding members of "The Jazz Messengers" were Kenny Dorham (trumpet), Hank Mobley (tenor sax), Horace Silver (piano), Doug Watkins (bass) and Art Blakey (drums). Horace Silver had the record deal with Blue Note records at the time, so the first 10" issue of this session came out as the Horace Silver Quintet. On February 6, 1955, the group did another 10" session which was first was issued as the Horace Silver Quintet, Volume 2.
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Jon Davis
Jon Davis has performed with and contributed compositions to many of the top jazz musicians worldwide throughout his career, which has spanned over 35 years, and has recorded many albums as a leader. Jon took up piano and guitar as a young teenager; he was inspired to play jazz after hearing records of Red Garland and Miles Davis. He briefly studied with Lennie Tristano then attended New England Conservatory, where his teachers included Ran Blake, Jaki Byard, and Madam Chaloff. After six months, he left to begin gigging around Boston.
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Lewis Nash
Lewis Nash has been one of the most in-demand jazz drummers for over 40 years. He has lent his tasteful swing and exciting soloing to over 400 recordings—among the longest discographies of any jazz musician. Originally from Phoenix, Arizona, he began playing professionally in his teens; by age 21 he had already performed with visiting jazz legends including Sonny Stitt, Slide Hampton, Lee Konitz, and Art Pepper.
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Paul Chambers
Bassist Paul Chambers was a leading rhythmic force in the 1950s and 1960s. He became one of the signature bassists in jazz history. Born in Pittsburgh but raised in Detroit, Chambers initially took up the baritone horn as a child. He followed suit with the tuba and didn't become interested in the string bass until 1949. Listening to Charlie Parker and Bud Powell and studying under a bassist of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Chambers began making headway in small bars of Hastings Street area and doing club jobs with Kenny Burrell, Thad Jones and Barry Harris. He did classical work in a group called the Detroit String Band, a rehearsal symphony orchestra.
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Philly Joe Jones
Born Joseph Rudolph Jones (July 15, 1923, in Philadelphia, PA), he dubbed himself "Philly Joe" to avoid confusion with the legendary drummer Jo Jones (also known as "Papa Jo" Jones). Unlike many jazz artists who started their careers by going on the road in their late teens, Philly Joe, at 18, joined the U.S. Army (1941) and remained in the Army until 1947. Soon after leaving the service, he moved to New York and joined Joe Morris's rhythm and blues band. His first recording (at age 25) was with the Morris band (September 19, 1948).
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Ralph Moore
Born in London, saxophonist Ralph Moore came to the US and attended Berklee College of Music, where he studied with saxophonist Andy McGhee. Three years later he received the Lenny Johnson Memorial Award for outstanding musicianship from the college. He moved to New York City in 1981 and within two months had joined the Horace Silver Quintet for an association that lasted four years and included tours of Europe and Japan.
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Victor Lewis
Drummer Victor Lewis was born in Omaha, Nebraska. Both of his parents were touring musicians. After graduating with a music major from University of Nebraska, Lewis moved to NYC in 1974, and was soon very much in demand, most notably playing in Woody Shaw's ground-breaking band. During this time he also played extensively with Carla Bley, David Sanborn and Dexter Gordon, among others. Through the '80s Lewis was a member of Stan Getz's band, which also included Kenny Barron on piano and Rufus Reid on bass.
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Vince Cherico
5-time Grammy Award Winner, Vince Cherico, is the drummer for featured artists in today's Jazz and World music venues. From 1995 - 2006 he was the drummer with Ray Barretto & The New World Spirit, later The Ray Barretto Sextet, and developed his reputation in Latin Jazz while touring the world, recording 6 CD's and 2 Grammy nominations for Contact & Time Was,Time Is. Modern Drummer describes Cherico as, "a drummer of fluidity, fire, and physical ease" who "plays with balanced dynamics and a commanding yet sensitive touch."
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Willie Jones III
Jones' sharp time-keeping and distinctive rhythmic expression are part of what make him one of the world's leading jazz drummers today. Willie Jones III's interest in jazz started at a young age when his father, a notable jazz pianist, introduced him to jazz music. After playing in his school marching band and jazz ensembles, Jones received a full scholarship to California Institute of the Arts, where he studied with James Newton and Albert "Tootie" Heath.
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